Polymorphism in programming languages
Jump to navigation
Jump to search

Polymorphism in programming languages is a design technique in which a construct, or a piece of software, behave differently in different contexts. [1]
Minimally, it can indicate a standard operator indicates different context. In
A + B = C
invokes different operation if A, B, and C are integer, floating point, or string variables.
C++
C++ makes extensive use of polymorphism, usually called overloading, with a technique called a virtual method.
References
- ↑ , Introduction to Polymorphism in C++, CS Teaching Material Archive, Computer Science Department, Boston University